On Mar 16, 2022, at 2:58 PM, Fred Cisin via cctech
<cctech at classiccmp.org> wrote:
[EXTERNAL EMAIL]
On Wed, 16 Mar 2022, Diedrich, Bryce via cctech
wrote:
> Just got a Commodore Vic-20. What is the safest way to power it off when I am done
using it?
On Wed, 16 Mar 2022, geneb via cctech wrote:
Turn it off.
Then disconnect the power cord from the wall.
Clean the machine
Place it in a sealed container with vaccum or inert gas
Optional: (if you are "done using it")
Post it on eBay as "R at RE"
or
place in a vault
or
drop it off at the recycling center
:-)
I?m somewhat curious here, too.
I *think* that as long as any file-write operations have completed (ie the tape isn?t
still turning) there?s no risk of long-term data corruption - that is, there?s no open
files as a modern hard-disk or SSD might have that need to be closed out. Of course,
anything in RAM not written to tape (or floppy) would be lost, but maybe that goes without
saying.
But the question still has merit. Some power supplies electrically sequence voltages
relying on the 120V to still be present even though the switch is ?OFF?, so powering down
by pulling the plug out of the wall is a different (and possibly more stressful) operation
that flipping the machine?s switch ?OFF?. My DEC Rainbow, for example, has a 2PST switch
that powers both the electronic power supply (one pole) and the cooling fan (the other
pole) and obviously it?s not brilliant to turn off the fan while the electronics are still
running, but in that case the ?sequencing? works the same whether you throw the 2PST
switch or pull the plug out of the wall.
I suspect none of this applies to the VIC-20 - the power switch just disconnects the
120VAC from the wall in the same way that pulling the wall plug out of its socket (or
flipping the switch on a power-strip) would do - but I don?t know this at all. Is that the
case?
I think the answer is different for almost any computer, so it?s pretty tough to answer
generically, but it would be kind of interesting to explore all of the variations on this.
- Mark